A "legend and lore" post wrote before my World of Cthon cosmology idea, it explores sorcery as channeling of raw magic, predating wizardry and eventually originating it!A big real-world mythology figure inspired the story... Which one?!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

A Murder of Rogues #dndnext

Hello freaks!

Again the focus of this roguish blogger is on #dndnext Rogues. But it's actually really on a different class compared to the last time, since the playtest packet has been updated with lots of changes, since.

This latest incarnation works very very well for me personally, in that even if it doesn't have my favorite feature from the previous one (Slippery Target, which marked the first time a Rogue could be deadly without actually attacking), it still manages to be a pretty good incarnation of my concept of Rogue. So let me stress it again: if I like it so much even without my favorite feature, it must be pretty darn cool!

So what's so cool about the new Rogue?
Rogue Schemes. The new incarnation of Rogue Schemes is incredibly cool. But if you know me, you also know that if I think it's cool, it doesn't mean it's cool as it is, but as it can be...
Yes, Rogue Schemes can beawesome. And that's because they can be as customizable as you want. That is, of course, if you're willing to accept the fact you're not using the game elements as they come straight out of the box. But don't close the tab yet, you fan of vanilla things! I wouldn't be as excited as I am about this if this game element required actual changes to work for me. It's not about changes: it's really just moving things around within a very strict... Scheme. The Rogue Scheme follows a scheme, yes it does. And it's a really neat one too:

Advantage tactic: not the official name of the feature, this is one of three tactics the Rogue Scheme offers for the Rogue to gain an all important Advantage during a round of combat. Here they are, described in loose terms, and with my comments.

Tumbling Strike: Advantage on melee attacks when starting turn at least 20 feet from target. This is wonderful since it's the heart of skirmish tactics and it doesn't make you depend on your allies, but it's far more restrictive than one could first think, because of the start of turn condition. If the target focuses on the Rogue and chases him/her, then the Rogue will likely never start 20 feet from the target, even if moving full speed after a Spring Attack (more on that later).

Backstab: Advantage on melee attacks against enemies that have another hostile creature adjacent to them. So it's flanking and it's very good, apart from the fact that it makes you teamwork-dependent.

Isolated Strike: Advantage on both melee and ranged attacks against enemies that have no other hostiles adjacent to them. This is apparently the least restricting of the three, and the only one working at range. But the subtle reason for which it's limited is that it forces the party to either deal with that target at a certain range, or leave it to you. So not very good in a typical party and in situations where you want to take down an enemy ASAP by focusing all attacks on it. Surprisingly good within a party were the melee characters are mobile and/or fight with Reach weapons! Or within all-ranged parties (but those will be rare in current D&D Next, I suspect...)

Skills and Mastery: these come as different features in the Rogue Scheme block, but they're locked to each other. You get two bonus Skills and then the Mastery feature (called differently depending on the scheme, such as Charm Mastery, Assassination Mastery etc), which makes you roll an additional d6 when performing checks with the Skills you received as bonus ones. Note that non-Rogue characters actually NEVER get such a high Skill bonus, not even at level 20. The maximum advancement of the Skill Die (and on ONE Skill only) goes up to d12 for everyone. But as a Rogue at 1st level, you already have TWO Skills with a 2d6 bonus. This is HUGE. And by the way, both this and the Advantage-gaining tactics are exactly what I had asked for the Rogue in the feedback surveys. WotC LISTENS...

Bonus Feats: nothing less than THREE bonus Feats. This sounds unbalanced at first, but Feats have been retouched quite a bit and organized into categories. And the Expert Feats from which all the Rogue Scheme bonus Feats come are essentially the new place for the Rogue Skill Tricks of the previous packet.

So where are we getting at?

Let's talk customization. Swapping an Advantage tactic for another is straightforward, and so is swapping Skills and the attached Mastery feature. The true customization goldmine lies in the Bonus Feats.

The fact that any character can take Expert Feats, and that their category doesn't make them inferior or superior to others, could mean that making the Rogue gain any Feat through this mechanic wouldn't unbalance things. However, given that variety is powerful by itself already, I wouldn't ever make a custom Rogue Scheme that grants more than one non-Expert Feat.

Plus, I said the customization was good here because each Scheme followed clear constraints, and if we assume the limitation to Expert Feats is one of those constraints, then no Feats from other categories. After all there are a lot of Expert Feats alone!

A murder of rogues... All different!
Can you believe I'll probably turn my Illusionist Mage character into a Rogue, and feel like it better fits my initial concept? Can you believe I'll play in a party that will be mostly made of Rogues, and yet they feel almost like different classes? No more fussing, here go the examples, taken from my still-not-truly-began campaign!

Evel, the charming acrobat hide-and-seek vampyress

Evel is a vampire in my campaign, but vampires are not that powerful in the Innistrad setting where we play, so for balancing reasons, I will just use the High Elf race, with bonus to Charisma instead of Intelligence, Mage Armor as the go-to cantrip, and an extra way of recovering Hit Dice, which is also compulsory if the vampire doesn't want to starve to death, you get what I mean... Also, many vampire limitations that I won't list.

Evel is a Rogue that combines borderline-erotic charming abilities with fast and furious melee fighting (with her vampiresque claws you see in the illustration..!). So here's her custom Rogue Scheme, which is actually a mix of Rake, Assassin, and Acrobat, plus her other feats since we're 4th level:

Bonus Feats: Charming Presence, Taunt, Tumbling Movement (an even more charming Rake. Note that Taunt should be called Seduce in this case..! The effect is the same, the method different!!)

Other Feats: Hide in Shadows (she still wants to be sneaky), Spring Attack (nearly needed for Tumbling Strike)

Background: Guild Thief (Tumble instead of Sneak, since she gets Sneak from Hide In Shadows)

So as I said before, the Tumbling Strike mechanic is cool and all, but risky. With Spring Attack, Evel can move her 20 feet to the target, attack, move 10 feet without provoking attacks, and then move the remaining 10 feet or 15 actually, since I give more speed to vampire characters). So in theory, she ends 25 feet from the target, but that means the target can easily approach her during the next turn, making it impossible to use the same tactic again. The good thing is that she can also attempt to hide at the end of each hit-and-run turn, so she's quite a bitch, like she wants to be! :-D

Darius von Richten, the knowledgeable monster hunter

Darius is a bounty hunter specializing in dangerous monsters such as lycanthropes, undead monstrosities, devils, and vampires. He's a urban ranger in a way, but also at home in the wilderness. The Scout scheme is nearly perfect for him. Also consider I'm using the Wood Elf mechanics (deprived of anti-Sleep bonuses and Trance) to better represent his haunted nature (he's been possessed by a demon when only a child), and the wilderness expertise. So Spot and Listen will end up being REALLY top-notch on Darius, combining Mastery and Advantage. The many Recall Lore skills also make him the sage of the group.

So not much to say here: a range-focused Scout Rogue, with no less than three Lores. It perfectly incarnates the player's vision of his character, just like with Evel.

Now, to MY character...

Hruthger Geistchmith, the scam-mage..!

Hruthger was an Illusionist Mage Charlatan with a focus on Bluff, who used his spells to simulate ghost hauntings and then make money on the scam-ghostbusting services he offered at a price..! For his work he just needed his ghostly familiar and the Minor Illusion cantrip, but I still want him to cast spells so... What about the Use Magic Device feat? It can be enough, especially since his scams give him the money he needs to buy spell scrolls, and a wand may be accessible too... So here's the most borderline-legal character of the bunch, but note that the only thing against the rules is having the familiar without being able to cast 1st level spells... That is, if using a wand that casts them is not enough..!

Really, with the ability to really come out of any incriminating situation thanks to Unflappable and still able to have Skill Focus on Bluff, empowered by the Mastery feature so that he can pull off truly unbelievable bluffs, is better than having spells. And he doesn't lose out on spells either, he just has to spend money on them, and have them less powerful of course, but that adds a lot to his messy character, and the fact he's still able to be deadly in combat without them is something that my fat and underhanded scam-mage always wanted..! :)

Hruthger's familiar: a "searchlight geist" named Glom, with an accordingly gloomy sense of humour..!

Note that I use High Elf mechanics for him too, in order to have an attack cantrip (Shocking Grasp, usable through the familiar and tactically useful), but since I really just wanted the cantrip, I added the High Elf package on top of... Halfling!! Which perfectly represents Hruthger, with the lower speed representing the fact he's obese, and the Medium size actually cancelling many of the Halfing's advantages... I say it's more than balanced! :)

Skender, the tricky specialist

Skender has undergone a lot of revisions since the player basically wanted a character to test the maximum amount of mechanics possible. But he's always been a roguish dwarf (although nor representing an actual dwarf, just as many other characters use mechanics of other races to represent other things). Anyway, I took the liberty of updating him without the player's consent (yet), to demonstrate how I could make yet another Rogue which felt different from the other three and could complement them.

Backstab (to better complement the party and work in tandem with the melee character not detailed here)

Trick Mastery and Skills (as per regular Trickster, Bluff and Conceal Object, needed for story reasons)

Other Feats: Two Weapon Defense, Trip Attack (Upgrading an already high AC, and proning opponents makes him a "secondary defender" in 4e terms!)

Background: Thug (his deformities alone justify this!)

So he's a hunched guy that is surprisingly tough (Mountain Dwarf mechanics), surprisingly elusive (Tumbling Movement), and also kind of sticky (Trip Attack proning opponents), with the classical abilities to disarm traps and open locks.

A (nearly) all-Rogues party!

So to sum up we have a party that has:

A lead man who is equivalent to an apprentice mage and can bluff his way out and into anything, running the scam that the party thrives economically with.

A marksman scout who is also the sage of the group and can perceive just about any threat and track any prey.

A charming skirmisher and lurker, who is survivable both in combat and social situation thanks to her trickery.

A technically proficient thief that is also very good at "locking in" enemies in melee, thus defending the squishy men of the party (the woman doesn't need any defending, unsurprisingly..!)

And let's also describe the last member, which the latest packet also made much better and closer to the initial concept...

Leaf, a young countryside boy that had to be a healer and "wilderness cleric", and is perfectly represented by the Warden Paladin, aided in his healer role by Herbalism and Magical Rejuvenation feats. He is a Commoner (Forester), perfect both to justify the nature connection and the humble origins. Some kind of Joanna D'Arc, but greener and... Male-er!

So as you can tell, I'm really really happy with this latest D&D Next playtest packet, and eager to test these wonderful characters. I'll surely write more about them once I'll have a chance to see them in action!

Lord Archaon

Lord Archaon is the most well known (?) fantasy nickname of Rafael, a guy who enjoys many different things, but with this persona mainly writing a lot of useless words about Dungeons & Dragons, and about all the fantasy tropes that the (in)famous game so well represents!